No there is no contract its prepaid, do you mean the part about listening to free talk live or the threat on my life? I am really worried now that they might be following me I got a faraday case and keep the phone in it when I'm traveling, I am super paranoid now. I take the battery out of it and the sim. Card and I also took the phone apart and took the storage capacitor out of it so it can't be powered up without the battery. I am worried I might be on their hit list now. I don't even use the phon now, what should I do?

You need to get a lawyer I had a problem where I live here with the city, trying to violate my constitutional rights. I got a prepaid lawyer to go after them and they backed off.Www.legalshield.com. You can fight city hall and win.!

this afternoon I discovered my prepaid cell phone service could not make or receive calls. So I called tech support the first time and this person said my service had been suspended, put me on hold for a long time. So I had to fix supper so I hung up. Called back a second time and the person reinstated my service, I ask her why she said you can't listen to radio on your cell phone, nothing is going to happen to you now but don't do it again. Does this sound like s threat on my life to you? bTW it is unlimited service do I would think I could call or listen to whatever it wanted to especially if I paid for it with money I earned legally. I used to listen to radio years ago on the phone even an att phone when I worked nights as a security guard and never had any problems, and one of my phones was an att phone what a world this is now. Just saying beware att users if you use an att phone and listen to free talk live on it, I just got the phone so apparently theymonitor your calls and don't like the views of free talk live, I will be dumping att as soon as my minutes run out. Maybe even sooner.

“US Marine Corps combat veteran Kristoffer Lewandowski, who served in three tours of duty overseas including tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, reportedly faces up to life in prison for pot charges connected to a June 2014 raid on his Geronimo, OK home that occurred after his wife and neighbors called police to get him help for a post-traumatic stress disorder flare-up. However, rather than providing mental health resources, police responding on the scene searched Lewandowski’s home for contraband and found six marijuana plants, weighing in at less than an ounce of plant matter in total, and charged him with, among other offenses, felony marijuana cultivation, which, under Oklahoma’s unusually-harsh marijuana laws, carries a maximum sentence of life in prison.

Truth in Media obtained an exclusive interview with Kristoffer Lewandowski’s wife Whitney Lewandowski in an effort to get their family’s story on the record.

Whitney Lewandowski said that her husband, a loving father to three children who was honorably medically discharged from the Marines and is 100% disabled due to severe post-traumatic stress disorder, was growing the marijuana for personal use, “He was just using it… He couldn’t get any, and, of course, we’re a military family, we’re very poor, we couldn’t afford to buy it anyway. So he was just growing it for himself. He was on his way out of the military and just wanted to see if it would help with [his mental health issues]. He was taking 13 pills a day, and it was just killing his liver. He was having all these issues with his body and he just wanted to try something more natural to just see if he could do without that many pills a day.” She called his medical marijuana treatments “absolutely effective.”